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b.u.mps stared blankly at her wicket, then at Jack.
"What shall we do next?" she inquired.
"We'll have a paper chase," suggested Jack, who was never at a loss.
"And where shall we get the paper?" asked b.u.mps in great glee at the prospect.
"Oh, come on into the house. We'll find it somewhere."
Jack was not particular where he got his paper. Miss Webb's waste-paper basket was first seized, then _The Times_ of the day before and sundry magazines in the drawing-room, then the library was invaded and various papers and circulars abstracted from the writing-table.
"I shall be hare, of course," said Jack as he sat down on the floor with b.u.mps, and rapidly began to tear his various papers to pieces.
"You must give me ten minutes' start, b.u.mps, by the clock, and then you must follow the paper, and never stop till you catch me up."
"You won't go twenty miles away?" said b.u.mps very anxiously.
"Of course I won't! And get Jill to come with you. It will be much greater fun if she comes."
Tearing the papers up kept them quiet for a good half-hour, and then Jack started, first taking off his jacket, and making b.u.mps promise on her honour not to look which way he went.
She waited her ten minutes and then went to Jill.
"Jill, do come and be the other hound. Jack has gone, and oh! he has gone through the thtable, I thee the paper!"
b.u.mps was too excited to wait. Jill was lying flat on the gra.s.s and hardly turned her head. She murmured, "It's too hot," and went on with her writing.
The afternoon wore on. Miss Webb was roused by the tea-bell and went down-stairs congratulating herself upon the quiet behaviour of the children. She found Jill deep in a storybook.
"Where are the others?" she asked.
"Paper-chasing," said Jill. "Aren't they stupid, this hot afternoon?"
"But I hope they have not gone far?"
"I don't know. The last time I did it, I was the hare, and I climbed a wall, and fell through a greenhouse the other side, and I was ill for three weeks; the gardener said I might have killed myself."
This was hardly comforting. Miss Webb looked anxiously out of the window.
"If they do not come soon, we must go and look for them. I hope they have not gone outside the grounds!"
"Oh, they mayn't be back till bed-time," said Jill.
"You ought not to have let b.u.mps go," said Miss Webb sharply. "She is far too small. You ought to have looked after her better!"
Jill did not appear moved in the slightest. She ate her tea and wondered at Miss Webb's concern; but as time went on, and there was no sign of the hare or hound, she began to share Miss Webb's anxiety.
"I'll go and look for them."
Out she ran, and Annie was made to accompany her. They followed the paper down the drive out into the road and across two fields, then it went through a farm-yard up into a loft, down again, and out at a small back gate. The farmer's wife came out and said she had seen both the children, for b.u.mps had tumbled down in the yard and grazed her knees.
"An' I took her in, an' gave her a piece of plaster, but she were dead set on following the young gentleman."
After going up the lane and going through another field, Annie said she could go no further.
"'Tis getting dark, and they'll most like be home by this time. Come back, Miss Jill. Master Jack ought to be ashamed of himself leading us this chase!"
So they turned back, but when they came in they found that Miss Webb had ordered the gardeners and grooms all out, for they had not returned.
Jill's bed-time came. It grew quite dark, and then at last voices were heard in the hall and Miss Webb rushed out. It was b.u.mps in the arms of a big farmer.
"I found her in a ditch," he said; "my mare s.h.i.+ed as I were-a-drivin'
home, and I seed somethin' white by the roadside, and then I seed it were a child. She have hurt her foot, poor little 'un. She must have failed a-tryin' to get over a fence above!"
"Is she dead?" cried Jill, pressing forward, for b.u.mps hung a limp and apparently lifeless bundle over the farmer's arm.
"Bless 'ee, no! Her be faint an' exhausted, but put her to bed an'
she'll be all right in the mornin'. Leastwise if her foot be not injured!"
So poor b.u.mps was put to bed, and her little swollen foot bathed and bandaged, and after a good deal of petting and feeding, she was able to look up and speak.
"It wath my short legs," she said sadly, and somehow or other this old excuse of hers, which was always brought forward when she had failed to do what the others did, brought the tears as well as a smile to Miss Webb's face. Not a word of blame or reproach was uttered. But when she had dropped into a sound sleep, Miss Webb left her, and her thoughts were now centred on the missing Jack.
The gardeners and grooms failed to trace him, and returned to the house between ten and eleven that night without having found any sign of him. Miss Webb pa.s.sed a sleepless night, and early in the morning the search was continued.
But Jill was the first in the field. She got up at six o'clock, and with determination in her small face, she trotted off following the paper track.
Over the same ground as the day before she went, but now in the suns.h.i.+ne it was a different matter, and though in some places the paper had disappeared, her sharp eyes tracked it out again, and she went on with renewed vigour.
At last she came to a standstill. The paper was to be seen close to a private plantation. And then it went no further. Jill climbed a low fence in spite of a board with "Trespa.s.sers will be prosecuted," and looked in every direction for signs of more paper. But none did she find.
"I'll go through the plantation," she said to herself, "and see where it leads, for I believe that Jack must have come to an end of his paper."
She followed a little beaten track; and presently with joy saw lying in a bush a white cotton pillow-case. It had been missing from Jack's bed the night before and was the bag he carried his paper in. Jill took it up and found it--as she expected--empty. Then she pressed forward, and at last came to the other end of the plantation. A deep and rather wide stream ran between it and a green field, in which there were several horses grazing. She looked down at the stream, then taking off her shoes and stockings she boldly splashed across. She was in the act of putting her stockings on again, when a gruff voice startled her.
"Now here's another of 'em!"
Looking up she encountered the gaze of a stout, red-faced old gentleman.
"Have you seen Jack?" she asked eagerly.
He shook his fist at her.
"Didn't you see my board?" he shouted. "How dare you come on in the face of it, and disturb my birds! If it isn't poachers, it's children now-a-days. I hate 'em both!"
"I'm very sorry," said Jill; "but please where is Jack. He has been away all night, and we can't find him."
"If that impudent boy I caught and thrashed yesterday was Jack, you had better follow him, and if you aren't quick about it you'll get what he got!"